[EN] A multi media performance and analysis of the lives and artistic practices of gender dissidents and their relationship with onscreen technologies. Drag in the form of transgender is a form of rebellion within patriarchal societies which strictly control any form of sexual dissidence. This practice began to spill out of the private sphere in the period of sexual liberation in the 1 60´s and 70´s in the West, giving rise to a series of representations of gender in artistic practices, which combine life with art. This drag, historically associated with the theatre, finally burst onto the screen and into the streets. Drag artists like Jackie Curtis, Jayne County and Divine David created alternative realities through the force of their personalities. They gave us an insight into the possibilities of fantastic worlds: spaces in which gender was fluid. Their lives were a living theatre, their drag personas like avatars navigating in a virtual world on stage or on the screen. In the postmodern era, where thanks to queer theory the performativity of gender is more widely accepted, those who play with gender in the performing arts have been at the forefront in developing an interactive relationship with the media, influencing and being influenced by it. While many performers have a somewhat uncomfortable relationship with the documentation of their practice because their work relies on their physical presence, those who play with gender often incorporate the use of photography, video and digital manipulation in the production of their work and have contributed in a major way to the evolution of representation in the digital era.